- 27
Paris Bordone
Description
- Paris Bordone
- Madonna and child with St Anthony Abbot and a young male donor
- inscribed on a cartellino lower right: Paris bordonus tarivisinus f.
- oil on panel, transferred to canvas
Provenance
His sale, London, Christie's, 3 June 1837, lot 19 (bought in);
By descent to Sir Victor Alexander George Anthony Warrender, 8th Bt, 1st Baron Bruntisfield (1899-1993);
His sale, London, Christie's, 26 November 1943, lot 2, where bought by Wengraf;
Acquired by Sir Thomas Barlow G.B.E. in 1946;
Thence by descent.
Exhibited
Birmingham, City of Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Italian Art from the 13th Century to the 17th Century, 1955, no. 19;
Manchester, City of Manchester Art Galleries, Art Treasures Centenary Exhibition, 1957, no. 56 (lent by Sir Thomas Barlow);
London, Royal Academy, 1960, no. 80;
London, Royal Academy, Winter Exhibition. Italain Art and Britain, 1969, no. 32.
Literature
C. Phillips, "Paris Bordone", in The Burlington Magazine, vol. XXVIII, 1915, pp. 94-98, reproduced;
A. Venturi, Storia dell'Arte Italiana, La Pittura del Cinquecento, Paris Bordon, vol. IX, P. III, Milan 1928, p. 1032;
B. Berenson, Italian Pictures of the Renaissance, Oxford 1932, p. 431;
B. Berenson, Italian Pictures of the Renaissance, Venetian School, London 1957, vol I, p. 46;
M. Woodall, City of Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Italian Art from the 13th Century to the 17th Century, exhibition catalogue, Birmingham 1955, p. 13, no. 19;
E.K. Waterhouse, "The Italian Exhibtion at Birmingham", in The Burlington Magazine, vol. XCVII, 1955, pp. 292-95;
K. Garlick, "Italian Art in Birmingham", in The Connoisseur, vol. CXXXVI, 1955, pp. 35-39, reproduced fig. 10;
D. Mahon, O. Millar et al., Italian Art and Britain. Royal Academy, exhibition catalogue, London 1960, p. 42, no. 80;
G. Canova, Paris Bordon, Venice 1964, p. 6, 81, reproduced fig. 5;
G. Fossaluzza, "Qualche Recupero al Catalogo Ritrattistico del Bordon", in Paris Bordon e il Suo Tempo, Treviso 1985, p. 191, and p. 201, not 45.
Condition
"This lot is offered for sale subject to Sotheby's Conditions of Business, which are available on request and printed in Sotheby's sale catalogues. The independent reports contained in this document are provided for prospective bidders' information only and without warranty by Sotheby's or the Seller."
Catalogue Note
This is a rare early work (indeed Claude Philips described it as the earliest)1 by the Venetian master Paris Bordone. Dated by Giordana Mariana Canova to the early 1520s it is governed by the gentle lyricism and intimacy of Giorgione's great religious landscapes of the preceding decades. Bordone has created "un mondo intensamente lirico, immerse in un'aria di silente e pur patetico raccoglimento".2 Such Sacre Converazioni, in which the holy family and attendant saints are seen in an Arcadian landscape, were popularised in Venice from the end of the 15th century by Giorgione, Titian and Giovanni Bellini; Bordone drew on the examples of his elders throughout the 1520s and into the 1530s, producing a number of similar works of broadly the same dimensions and of a similar compositional type. Most notable amongst these in relation to the present work is the Madonna and child with Saint Jerome, Saint Anthony Abbot and a donor in the Glasgow Art Gallery which is signed in precisely the same manner, drawing attention to the artist's place of birth; in this latter St Anthony, for whom the same model must surely have been used, appears in a remarkably similar pose, albeit a little more upright. The Madonna is set directly in front of some dense bush, while beyond St Anthony and the donor lies an hilly, remarkably Titian-esque, landscape crowned with a small group of ecclesiastical buildings. Regarding the form of the signature, all the known works signed in this way are universally considered to date from the 1520s. Other examples are the Virgin and child with Saints Christopher and George in the Tadini Gallery at Lovere on the Lago Iseo and the Madonna and child with Saints Jerome and Anthony of Padua in the Giovanelli Palace in Venice.
There are many aspects to this youthful work already typical of Bordone himself; amongst these the rich, vibrant red and numerous folds of the Madonna's drapery and the smooth, rounded hands. Clearly though, Bordone, only recently arrived in Venice from his native Treviso, is still, as Vasari put it, determined in all ways to follow the manner of Giorgione and his master Titian. While comparisons have been made between the Madonna here and the shepherdess in Titian's Three Ages of Man, and between the infant Christ with the infant Paris in Giorgione's Finding of Paris, it is above all in the intimate beauty and quiet grandeur that permeates the whole scene where Giorgione's influence most resonantly sounds.
1. Phillips, op. cit., p. 94.
2. Canova, op. cit., p. 6.